In May 2024, former Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody announced that two arrests had been made stemming from a billing scheme that had defrauded the Florida Medicaid program out of more than $1.6 million. Not only did prosecutors accuse the duo of defrauding the state’s Medicaid program, but they were also accused of hiring unlicensed medical staff that resulted in the poor treatment of Medicaid patients.
Brodeur’s bill aims to evaluate all aspects of the Medicaid program, identify and recommend policies to limit spending growth, improve health outcomes, and provide regular reports and recommendations to the Legislature.
The committee would be composed of three members from the Senate and three from the House, who would each serve a term of two years on the committee. The Chair and the Vice Chair would alternate between the House and Senate and serve a term of one year.
Duties would include all aspects of the state Medicaid program, with a focus on financing, quality of care, administrative functions and operational efficiency to ensure the program is providing transparency in the provision of health care plans and providers. Brodeur hopes this will enhance access to quality health services to Medicaid recipients while providing stability to the state’s budget.
The committee would also identify and recommend policies to Medicaid spending growth while improving health outcomes for patients using the program. The committee would convene at least twice a year, or as often as deemed necessary to conduct business, and the meetings would be able to be held electronically or through a teleconference.
The Auditor General and the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) would be responsible for entering a data sharing agreement by July 1, 2025. The Auditor General would assist the committee by providing professional staff or consulting services, while the committee would have access to relevant records and would be able to compel testimony and evidence.
AHCA would be required to notify the committee of any changes to Medicaid managed care capitation rates and submit reports detailing expenditure and utilization trends. All reports submitted to the Legislature related to Medicaid would be required to also be submitted to the committee.
If passed, the bill would come into effect upon becoming law.
Hemp regulation will again be a hot topic this Session, and to ensure lawmakers have the best information available, House Speaker Daniel Perez is assembling a short-term panel to dig into the issue.
He’s empaneling a new, but temporary, Combined Workgroup on Hemp. It’ll last for seven days beginning March 3, during which the group’s 24 members will hear from experts, regulators and industry leaders.
Perez said hemp regulation is one of “a handful of complicated, intensely lobbied issues that fall outside the personal and professional experience” of House members, and it has “repeatedly come up in conversations” lawmakers have had with him and his leadership team.
He noted that the workgroup will focus solely on gaining knowledge about hemp and the hemp industry. Meetings won’t include consideration of “legislation or specific policy proposals,” he said, nor will they be forums for “generic public testimony.”
After the meetings conclude, the workgroup’s members will be tasked with identifying additional information or resources that could help House members make informed legislative decisions.
Perez said not to read too much into his decision to create the workgroup.
“Because of the way this process sometimes works, and the tendency of lobbyists and advocates to insinuate secret meanings, let me be perfectly clear: there are no signals being sent,” he said.
“House Leadership has not adopted any position on this issue nor are we laying the predicate to do so in the future. We are not endorsing any particular bill, position, industry, or perspective. How — or even whether — we proceed with legislation on this issue this Session will be determined by all of you.”
The panel’s members include 12 members each from the Industries and Professional Activities Subcommittee and Housing, Agriculture and Tourism Subcommittee.
They include Republican Reps. Shane Abbott, Yvette Benarroch, Erika Booth, Richard Gentry, Mike Giallombardo, Peggy Gossett-Seidman, Jim Mooney, Vanessa Oliver, Toby Overdorf, Bill Partington, Juan Porras, Mike Redondo, Michelle Salzman, Judson Sapp, Chase Tramont, Kaylee Tuck and Brad Yeager, and Democratic Reps. Bruce Antone, Lindsay Cross, Anna Eskamani, Gallop Franklin, Yvonne Hinson, Felicia Robinson and Leonard Spencer.
Salzman, who chairs the Housing, Agriculture and Tourism Subcommittee, will manage the workgroup.
Workers assemble pre-rolled cigarettes of hemp flower containing cannabidiol, or CBD. Hemp products also include liquids, gummies, candy and oils, among other things. Image via AP.
The hemp industry exploded across the United States following the passage of the 2018 Farm Bill, which established a federal framework for producing and processing the versatile crop. Among the changes the bill brought was a so-called “loophole” that allowed the production of non-cannabis hemp extract products that compete with cannabis products.
There has been a regulatory war since, between the hemp and cannabis industries, with both sides seeking to hold an overshare or monopoly of the market.
Florida lawmakers last year approved a similar regulation measure (SB 1698) that opponents warned would kill the hemp extract industry, which produces both THC products that offer psychotropic effects similar to cannabis and CBD products that offer health benefits without a “high.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis ultimately vetoed the legislation, sponsored by Republicans Colleen Burton and Tommy Gregory in the Senate and House, respectively. He cited the severe and adverse impacts it would have on Florida’s more than 100,000 workers and many small businesses in the industry, which has a more than $10 billion annual impact on the state economy.
One of SB 1698’s Democratic supporters, Tracie Davis of Jacksonville, is carrying this year’s version of the legislation (SB 1030) on the Senate. Democrat-turned-Republican Rep. Hillary Cassel of Dania Beach filed its House analog (HB 601).
Neither has received a committee hearing yet.
Sarasota Republican Sen. Joe Gruters has also filed bills that would allow limited home growth of cannabis plants for personal use (SB 546) and ease requirements for medical cannabis users (SB 552).
Pensacola Republican Rep. Alex Andrade also has a lengthier proposal (HB 555) that contains aspects of both of Gruters’ bills.
And asked if Maduro “should go” and “leave,” Rubio suggested that there still is a path to remove the leader — whose election the United States disputes — from power.
“We’re going to work on that policy because I’m going to tell you something,” Rubio said. “He is allowing Iran to operate out of Venezuela. He is allowing the Chinese to operate out of Venezuela. He’s threatening his neighbors in the region. He has flooded us with gang members — flooded with these Tren de Aragua gang members that are in this country doing terrible things. Why would we want someone like that to be there?”
Though the former Senator would not “discuss publicly what our work is going to be in that regard,” he said Maduro “remains the same threat today that he was two years ago, three years ago, four years ago.”
“That’s going to have to be dealt with,” Rubio added.
How Maduro will be “dealt with” is worth watching, given conflicting statements from the administration.
Special Envoy Richard Grenell, who reportedly had been considered for Secretary of State before Rubio was selected, told the Epoch Times that the Trump administration did not want “to do regime change,” even as the administration is “clear-eyed” about Caracas.
Gruters’ new measure would enhance privacy protections for crimes victims and their family by keeping certain information confidential.
Sarasota Republican Sen. Joe Gruters has filed new legislation (SB 1266) that aims to further strengthen protections for crime victims by ensuring their personal information remains confidential to reduce the risk of harassment and revictimization.
In March 2024, Florida celebrated five years since enshrining Marsy’s Law into the state constitution. Those provisions created a clear set of rights for crime victims. Marsy’s Law was named after Marsalee Ann Nicholas, a student at the University of California Santa Barbara who was stalked and killed by her ex-boyfriend in 1983.
After her murder, Marsy’s family was confronted by the perpetrator despite receiving no notification from the courts that he had been released on bail. States that have adopted Marsy’s Law into their respective constitutions aim to give crime victims meaningful and enforceable constitutional rights equal to the rights of the accused.
Gruters’ bill states that the Legislature recognizes the critical need to safeguard specific information that could be used to identify or harass crime victims or their families. The measure seeks to ensure that certain public records, routinely generated by any agency dealing with crime victims, are made confidential and exempt from certain Florida Statutes, and Article I of the State Constitution.
The bill aims to block disclosure of personal identifying and location information due to fears that victims and their family members could face threats.
The new measure would revise the existing public records exemption for documents that reveal certain information about victims of crimes. It includes only those records that reveal personal identifying or location information that could be used to locate or harass the victim or their family.
The legislation notes that confidential information must be released as needed for judicial proceedings, and access cannot be denied to criminal defendants. Individuals who are authorized to access the confidential and exempt information during any judicial proceeding must not disclose any such information to external parties, except as reasonably necessary to prepare a defense and pursue legal remedies.
The bill provides criminal penalties for violations including a potential penalty of up to one year in jail. It further provides for a potential repeal of the exemption on Oct. 30, 2030, unless reviewed and saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
If passed, the bill would come into effect July 1.